Hello, my college background is in mathematics, with some physics. I will be working with someone who will be learning college level physics in about 6 months. I would like to help them get a head start. I am looking for a source either a work book or training video which could introduce someone to basic concepts in physics like Mass, Momentum, Inertia etc. It would be nice if there was such a resource which introduced these topics with little, minimum or no mathematics if possible. Does anyone know of such a resource?

Everyone learns in different ways, so it's really down to you how to find an effective way for your student to learn.

The internet is great for personal study, but it's terrible as a teaching resource for teachers. For effective teaching you need to provide complete, concise, compact and clear information on physics theorems for your student. The internet can provide you a lot of information, but you'll have to arrange all of the information yourself into a form that your student can digest at their skill level.

If you're teaching somebody else, you also need to give them physics problems. Personally, I think the A-level revision guides are good sources of physics problems, which will lead nicely to college-level physics. They are also relatively cheap.

This is a booklet designed for UK physics courses for students typically aged between 15-18. I'm sure you'll be able to find US equivalents. I have used resources like these in the past to successfully get physics students to university.

If you only want online resources, then I can recommend the following two websites for general physics and engineering information:

My goal (years ago) was to write a path of examples that would explain
and connect HS physics (insufficient math) and Calc (too much exteraneous math)
with beginning mechanical engineering (necessary math but no more).

At my site, Thermo Spoken Here!, are posted about 250 problems with premise, solution and discussion.